Sunday, Mar. 28, 2026--San Antonio
Middle Spoon by Alejandro Varela is a book that was rated highly last year and the author will be here at the San Antonio Book Festival next month. It was available for immediate checkout on Libby. I had just finished a book and I had 3 more on hold with one coming within days and the other two within a couple of weeks, so I decided to read this one during the wait time. I almost quit it during the first few pages, though. I got the sense of an author trying harder to impress me with his vocabulary than to get me into the story. I stayed with it because the story started being interesting while the sprinkling of "impressive" words decreased greatly. The protagonist is a member of a family of 4--the younger of two married gay men and their two children. The men have been together for about 20 years in a committed, but open relationship. The book takes place after the younger man has developed a side relationship with a man 8 years younger than he is. The relationship has lasted for 3 quarters of a year, but has its problems. The married man has fallen in love with the younger boyfriend, but it is a lopsided relationship in several ways. Beyond the age difference, there is a maturity difference, an income difference, and a difference in what each one wants. The married man still loves his husband and his children and wants to stay in that relationship. His husband has no concerns if that is how it works out. But that raises many questions which is what the book is really about. How can a polyamorous relationship work over time? Can the boyfriend accept being a part of one? Will the children and the husband accept the boyfriend. The book actually begins when the boyfriend has ended the relationship as it has currently existed (outside of the family relationship). The protagonist is suffering from heartache. He's also ADHD, has been seeing two therapists at the same time over several years, is a Black Latino in a mixed racial marriage/family which is already a problem within society in general, and is worried about how difficult it will be for society to understand an accept a polyamorous family. He is writing unsent emails to the boyfriend as a way of trying to work through his heartache, of trying to figure out if he will get over it, of analyzing the details of the relationship over time, of trying to figure out how to get the boyfriend back, and of trying to figure out if he can make the polyamorous relationship work out if he can get to the boyfriend to agree to try it. His mind is so "unique" that the book is often humorous while his ADHD inflexibility is often frustrating. I don't consider it to be a great book, but it is a good enough book. I have it 3 1/2 stars out of 5.
Note: The authors early book, The Town of Babylon which I have also read, is a better book in my opinion.